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Gas Price in Estonia

H2 2025 · incl. all taxes · Consumption band: < 1,000 GJ/year

Current Price

7.57ct/kWh

19.7% cheaper vs. EU average (9.43 ct/kWh)

EU Average

9.43 ct/kWh

H2 2025

Rank

#24

of 32 countries

Price History

Price History

PeriodPrice
H2 20257.57 ct/kWh
H1 20258.57 ct/kWh
H2 20247.85 ct/kWh
H1 20246.87 ct/kWh
H2 20238.21 ct/kWh
H1 202311.09 ct/kWh
H2 202220.18 ct/kWh
H1 202214.76 ct/kWh
H2 20218.08 ct/kWh
H1 20214.00 ct/kWh
H2 20203.52 ct/kWh
H1 20204.28 ct/kWh
H2 20194.35 ct/kWh
H1 20194.47 ct/kWh
H2 20184.13 ct/kWh
H1 20183.90 ct/kWh
H2 20173.55 ct/kWh
H1 20174.19 ct/kWh
H2 20162.99 ct/kWh
H1 20163.37 ct/kWh
H2 20153.71 ct/kWh
H1 20154.87 ct/kWh
H2 20144.78 ct/kWh
H1 20144.85 ct/kWh
H2 20134.52 ct/kWh
H1 20135.12 ct/kWh
H2 20124.97 ct/kWh
H1 20124.98 ct/kWh
H2 20114.06 ct/kWh
H1 20113.88 ct/kWh
H2 20103.83 ct/kWh
H1 20103.61 ct/kWh
H2 20093.13 ct/kWh
H1 20093.93 ct/kWh
H2 20084.39 ct/kWh
H1 20083.28 ct/kWh
H2 20072.48 ct/kWh

Estonia's household gas price is currently 7.57 ct/kWh (H2 2025), ranking #24 among 32 European countries. This is 19.7% below the EU average of 9.43 ct/kWh.

The cheapest gas in Europe can be found in Georgia at 3.68 ct/kWh, while Sweden has the highest price at 17.98 ct/kWh.

Compared to the previous period (H1 2025), the gas price in Estonia has fallen by 1.0 ct/kWh (11.7%). Over the past three years, prices have fallen significantly — partly due to government interventions and lower wholesale prices.

Among its geographic neighbors, Estonia's gas price of 7.57 ct/kWh is the lowest among its neighbors — cheaper than Finland (12.98 ct/kWh). The EU-wide average is 9.43 ct/kWh.

FAQ

Why is the data from H2 2025?
Eurostat publishes household gas prices semi-annually with approximately 6 months delay. H2 2025 is the most recent officially available period. The next update is expected around Q2 2026. Source: Eurostat (nrg_pc_203), consumption band < 1,000 GJ/year.
What is included in the gas price?
The displayed price includes the energy component, network charges, taxes and levies — the actual end-consumer price for household customers.
Why do gas prices differ across Europe?
Price differences result from varying dependence on imports (Russia, LNG, Norway), infrastructure, storage capacity and tax policies. Countries with domestic gas production or long-term supply contracts often pay less.

Source: Eurostat (nrg_pc_203)